LaSalle County
ILGenWeb

1932 Stories

MY GRANDFATHER'S EARLY FARMING

By Gerald Maubach, Dist. 19

Mr. Frank Ehrnthaller, who is my grandfather, is an old pioneer. He told me quite a few interesting things of pioneer life.

In about 1865 he came to central Illinois and with his parents started farming on fifty acres, with five hoes, two rakes, two oxen, one plow with a wooden moldboard, and an A-shaped harrow.

The plows had iron shares, which were obtained at the nearest village. They then cut down a tree and hewed out a wooden moldboard with ax and knife.

When this prairie was unbroken they called it "raw prairie." When they wanted to cultivate a part of it they would have to "sub-soil," or, that is, to take a large plow drawn by two or three yoke of oxen and this way plow the ground about two or three inches deep and let the ground dry out, then come along later in the same furrow and plow up the rich soil, which was now visible. This made it more easy to cultivate. They also had a two-shovel plow with wooden moldboards, which they used in plowing in the fall after the wheat was harvested.

In the timber-land, after a few trees had been cut down and used as fire wood and other things, they would have several yoke of oxen there and then would pull stumps to clear the land. Where it was too rolling and hilly, after the trees were cut down, blue grass would become so thick that it looked like a carpet.

When it was time to sow wheat or oats they would get out with their wooden plows and an A-shaped harrow. These harrows were made by nailing wood, six inches square, together and then nailing cross pieces on them to hold them in shape. The teeth were made of wood and were easily broken. He mentioned that at one time he ran over a stone and broke the teeth out of the harrow. His father made him stay up all night to fix the harrow. He had to whittle out teeth and put them in place. They had regular augers to bore holes, but the "beginners," as he called them, had to heat iron and burn them through the wood to put the teeth in.

The two-shovel plow was drawn by one horse or an ox. When they sowed wheat the whole family got out, with sacks tied over their shoulders, and then scattered the grain with their hands. Such a thing as a seeder was unknown.

When planting corn, the soil was prepared and furrows were made, then they would measure off so that each hill would be even lengthwise and crosswise. After dropping the kernels in a hole they would cover the kernels with a hoe.

They only plowed their corn twice, and the way it was plowed was that the plow was drawn by one horse or an ox. They went down one side of the row and came up on the other side. This way having one row of corn plowed in one round, or once up and once down the row.

Grandfather said that when the flies were bad the oxen would throw up their tails and run with plow and all to "buffalo yalls" or ponds of water, which were deepened by buffaloes standing and lying in them. Some of these ponds covered from three to five acres of ground.

The only kind of fences were made of boards. To keep the chickens and swine in they put the boards closer together at the bottom than at the top. Most fences were about four and a half feet high. In order to get the boards, they had to cut trees and haul them to the saw-mill, which was turned by water power in some large creek or small river. The fences were put up in pieces called "two-post panels;" that is, two posts were nailed on to the boards and then set into the ground. It takes three posts to make a panel, but two are all that are required, because one end was nailed to the other panel.

My grandfather worked hard many, many days farming in this manner. But in later years he was financially able to buy a farm for himself near Toluca. He now lives in Toluca and his farm he has placed in the hands of his children.

From my grandfather's story of early life I learn that "hardships and trials make an honest and successful.

CONTINUE to NEXT 1932 story

Extracted 08 Nov 2018 by Norma Hass from Stories of Pioneer Days in La Salle County, Illinois, by Grammar Grade Pupils, published in 1932, page 91.


Visit Our Neighbors
Lee DeKalb Kane
Bureau Kendall
Putnam Grundy
Marshall Woodford Livingston

Explore ILGenWeb
Search Our Archives

  
LaSalle County Archives